Its Not A Hobbie, Its A Way Of Life
Hardware
Netbooks – no real advancements since 2008
Mar 25th
Netbooks are a class of hardware that have a love/hate crowd in the tech world. The usefulness, or lack their of, varies depending on who you ask. They started as a niche modding device. The Asus EeePC 701 took the techies by storm, cramming tons of computing features into a very portable format. Netbooks matured from the original EeePC 701, and unfortunately evolved into a standard cookie cutter format. And even with Intel’s release of new Atom chips, that doesn’t appear to be changing.
Back when netbooks first started catching on, every manufacturer released netbooks with the exact same specs. Atom N270, 1GB RAM, either an 80GB spindle or 8-16GB SSD hard drive, and a 10.1″ 1024×600 screen. Designs of the hardware varied (with Dell & HP leading the way in my opinion), but the hardware inside did not change. The Atom N270 combined with the awful idea of a 600px height screen was enough to turn people off from the idea of netbooks. Trying to use the internet on these devices yielded mixed results with this combo.
Intel’s on-board 945 graphics chip was not powerful enough to render Aero effects in Windows Vista / 7 in a smooth and snappy fashion, nor was it able to do any type of h.264 or other video decoding (with mpeg2 being an exception). As a result, all video content had to be rendered by the Atom N270, which was already being taxed by the bloated Windows OS (and I mean bloated in the sense that Windows never took netbooks seriously and never optimized it for this class of hardware. Some argue Windows 7 helps with this, and I agree, however the CPU is still taxed with most functions). nVidia’s Ion chips brought a breath of life into the stale netbook market, providing modest 3D & 2D hardware acceleration, but there were only a select few manufacturers choosing to add Ion chips.
This problem was compounded by Microsoft’s announcement that they would put restrictions on the hardware specs that vendors would be allowed to put into netbooks in order to use the cheapest version of Windows, Windows Starter Edition. They limited vendors to the standard cookie cutter 1Gb of RAM and 1024×600 screens, effectively stifling innovation in this space. They also gimped the personalization of Windows Starter by not allowing the user to change the background picture.
There was hope that Intel’s Pinetrail Atom chips would finally give the netbook market a real performance boost. All they did tough was embed the GPU and chipset functionality into the Atom CPU. They did make slight improvements in the clock speed and lower power usage a touch, but it won’t ultimately make netbooks any snappier.
Some would say that this move by Intel to incorporate the chipset and GPU into the Atom CPU was anti-competitive. It blocks nVidia from being able to have their original Ion product naitively integrated into the new Pinetrail netbooks. nVidia has released Ion2 to counter this, but there’s no performance improvements, it’s just the Ion product minus the chipset component. The one nice feature with Ion2 is the Optimous technology. This allows a netbook (or laptop) to use the built in Intel graphics for regular use (which has better power management than the Ion), and then switch on the fly to the Ion GPU when needed (for video decoding, 3d rendering, etc.).
Since pinetrail netbooks have started hitting the market, the hardware specs are suffering a repeat of the cookie cutter treatment. This time, we’re getting an Atom N450, 1Gb of RAM, and the 1024×600 screen. Such an improvement…
What’s the solution? It’s actually kind of simple, but it’s doubtful the hardware vendors will catch on. Below are the hardware spec solution that I personally would like to see become the standard. If enough of the manufacturers implemented these specs to keep each other competitive, we would probably only see a modest increase in costs – probably in the $20-$40 range.
Atom D510 dual core CPU (or N300 for better TDP)
nVidia Ion2 built in (or Ion if the N300 is used)
11″ or 11.6″ screen at 1366×768
32GB SSD hard drives
Built in SIM for WWAN 3G+ access.
6-cell battery
I want to touch base on the 11″ screen choice. I have a 10.1″ 1366×768 screen on my HP 2140. I personally love it, but I do know that it’s too small for most people. Increase in size by just a touch, but keep this resolution. There’s no point in having the Ion do 720p decoding when you’ve only got a 1024×600 screen. Having a 12″ screen starts to be too big for a “netbook size.” You start getting into the regular laptop sizes at that point, and it pushes the prices up towards $550 or more, the same as the entry level laptops.
This is pretty much a ramble post, but I believe these points have some merit. Netbooks are a great idea for portability, and they could be used for all a large majority of the productivity functions that people currently choose to use their laptops for, instead of a netbook.
All we need is for companies to give netbooks some proper TLC.
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Hacktivated iPhone? Push Notifications Fixed!
Feb 22nd
For as long as I’ve had my iPhone, I have been without Push Notifications. Reason being, I’ve jailbroken and software unlocked my iPhone so I can use it on a different carrier than the one the phone was originally purchased on. Push notifications hasn’t been something I’ve needed, but it’s been something that I’ve wanted a good, solid, reliable solution for. If you’ve jailbroken your phone, but you’re with the same carrier your phone is locked to, you’re unaffected by this issue. Only those that have had to unlock their phones have struggled with this.
The popular search results on the interwebs site the iphoneil.net repository as the fix. While that might have worked for a select few in the beginning when they first launches their solution, the theory behind their resolution was flawed. The keys used for the iphoneil fix were shared, so it was quite common to get other people’s push notifications on your phone, or not get them at all cause they were delivered to someone else.
Pushfix.info has the ultimate remedy. Although it’s not free, the $6 price tag is well worth it to get this feature working again. If submit your payment by Paypal or credit card, it will only take about 5 mins to get the feature working, and process is dead simple.
Provide your phone’s IMEI# on the purchase page, and submit your payment. This info is required to generate unique push keys for your phone. After your payment is submitted, add http://cydia.pushfix.info to your Cydia repositories. Next, search for and install the PushFix package and all its dependencies. Be sure you’re installing the package from the pushfix repository. A PushFix application will get installed on your Springboard. Launch this app and send a test push notification. You should receive a reply shortly informing you that push is now working. And you’re done!
Any additional info you may need regarding the product or how to install it is available on the creator’s main website, or in their detailed post on how to install the product.
My YouTube access broke after installing this fix, however, unlike push notifications, YouTube does not require unique keys. The PushFix creator has provided 3 working keys that are available in the pushfix repository under YouTube Fix. Simply add one of them (not all 3) to get access to YouTube back.
If your GPS stops working after installing PushFix, turn off Location Services, shut down the phone, wait 10 secs, and power on the power again. After it’s back at the home screen for bout 30 secs, turn on Locations Services and then retest your GPS app.
WARNING!! YOU MAY LOOSE PRODUCTIVITY FROM FIXING PUSH NOTIFICATIONS!!! As a consequence of having push on my phone now, my free time has been spent playing Words With Friends… Damn you addicting social games!!
Motorola Milestone on TELUS
Feb 17th
Canada finally has their version of the DROID. The Motorola Milestone has launched on TELUS’s 3G+ network, giving us north of the boarder official access to an Android 2.0 device (that also comes with a full keyboard). The Milestone is the GSM/HSDPA version of Verison’s DROID. Most reviews of the DROID say the tactile keyboard isn’t the greatest, but it you refuse to use on-screen keyboards and want a fast Android smart phone, this is definitely the one you want.
You can grab yours for $199 on a 3yr contract, or $599 buy out. Motorola is also offering a free car mount kit for use with Google’s kick ass turn-by-turn GPS application that comes with Android 2.0.
Mini-ITX RAID5, finally!
Jun 22nd
Ever since I built my Mini-ITX Smoothwall router two years ago, I’ve been searching for a Raid5 Mini-ITX solution that doesn’t involve a $150-$400 PCI RAID card, as most of them won’t fit into ITX cases. Well today, I stumbled across the solution!
Logic Supply now carries RAID5 daughter boards for most of their Jetaway motherboards. This also just happens to be the same board type I bought for building the smoothie. I added a 3x 10/100/1000 NIC as the daughtercard, which I could easily change over to this RAID5 daughtercard.
If you’re starting from scratch, here’s the parts list to build your own Mini-ITX RAID5 NAS:
Jetway J7F2WE-1G2 Mini-ITX Mainboard – $169
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/j7f2we_1g2
Jetway 4x SATA Add-On Module with RAID Support (Marvell 88SE6145-TFE1) – $39
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/adpe4s
Emphase 40-pin Industrial Flash Disk Module 1 GB – $29
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/fdm40xdi1g
Chenbro ES34069 Mini-ITX Home Server/NAS Chassis – $205
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/es34069
Add to this:
- any four 3.5″ SATA hard drives of your choosing
- 1Gb of DDR2 RAM
- load er up with FreeNAS.
Welcome to RAID5 MiniITX bliss.
I’m still working through the how I’m going to put this into production with the hardware I currently have around the house, but eventually I’d like to:
- Convert my Smoothie into this FreeNAS box
- Use FreeNAS as an iSCSI target
- Load up ESXi on my current server hardware and point the storage volume to the FreeNAS iSCSI target
- Install pfsense as my router in a VM.
- Toy around with other VMs and ESXi to my heart’s content!
Downside? I loose the PC aspect of my server. It’s currently hooked up to my HDTV for watching MKVs & HD podcasts. Anyone know if you can output a VM’s video to an HDTV?
Palm’s WebOS – I’ll to do everything for you
May 8th
A friend of mine has been watching Palm Pre news just as closely as I have. He sent me this exerpt today, but he unfortunately did not have a source for the info, so take this at face value.
“Roger McNamee of Elevation Partners, who invested 20 percent of his private equity fund in Palm, has revealed some pretty cool new location aware features that come as standard with the Pre.
The first thing he mentioned is that it “does stuff for you,” which in this case he used the calendar as an example; McNamee said that when you wake up in the morning, it will have already had a look at your calendar and downloaded things such as maps and Wikipedia entries for the people, places and organisations you are going to visit for the whole day, all in advance without you having to do anything other than turn the setting on. Wow, pretty cool, right?
It gets better!
It knows when you are going to be late. No, seriously. Using the Pre’s GPS, Clock and Calendar functionality, the device will check the calendar to see where you are supposed to be and at what time – it will then check where you actually are (i.e, 5 miles away from where you are supposed to be) and then warn you that you are going to be late, calculate roughly how late you are going to be, and email all of the involved parties to let them know you’ll be however minutes late. Awesomeness.”
Giggity Giggity.
If anyone knows the source of the above, please let me know. Thanks!